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Muhammed Qasim
"I'd rather you explained to her why we can't go", I'd is I had?
In the below sentence "I'd" is a contraction of "I had", not "I would"?
- I'd rather you explained to her why we can't go
6 de sep. de 2018 16:17
Respuestas · 7
1
Hey Muhammed, how are you? I hope you are doing just fine!
* May I provide you with information on the usage of the idiom ''would rather''?
Firstly, you should know that the ''I'd rather'', used in the context concerned, is a contraction of ''I would rather''. On average, when we speak about a specific preference (our preference now), ''would rather'' and ''would prefer'' have the same meaning and are interchangeable.
--> Would rather can be abbreviated to 'd rather .
--> Would prefer can be abbreviated to 'd prefer :
E.g.: ''We went to the theatre yesterday; today I would rather go to the cinema''.
E.g.: ''We went to the theatre yesterday; today I would prefer to go to the cinema''.
** NOTE: We say:
1) would rather . . . than...
2) would prefer . . . rather than or would prefer . . . instead of...
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd rather sit in the garden than watch TV''.
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd prefer to sit in the garden rather than watch TV''.
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd prefer to sit in the garden instead of watching TV''.
*** We use a past tense after ''would rather'' when we speak about the actions of other people, even
though that action may be in the present or future:
E.g.: ''I'd rather you took a taxi (instead of walking) – it's not safe on the streets at night''.
E.g.: ''The film is quite violent. I'd rather our children didn't watch it''.
Hope that helps!!! :)
7 de septiembre de 2018
1
The "I'd rather" here is a contraction of I would rather.
It has two different constructions:
1) A sentence with the same subjects, "would rather" is followed by the base form of verb.
2) A sentence with different subjects, "would rather" is followed by the simple past clause.
E.g.:
1) (+) I'd rather work at home than go out tonight.
(-) I'd rather not go out tonight.
2) (+) I'd rather you worked at home tonight.
(-) I'd rather you didn't go out tonight.
Hope they help,
Tere
6 de septiembre de 2018
1
Hi Muhammed,
"I'd" rather" in this sentence is a contraction of "I would" rather.
Regards,
Sinead
6 de septiembre de 2018
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Muhammed Qasim
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Punyabí, Urdu
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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